u/UnconcernedPuma

Looking for house cleaner recommendations

Hey yall, looking for a one time (and possibly recurring) deep house clean. Nothing crazy just want to get someone in to get our house looking good after a very busy season. House is about 1500sqft

Any recommendations? Anyone to avoid? Let me know!

Thanks

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u/UnconcernedPuma — 3 days ago
▲ 19 r/Medford

Looking for local live music in the Rogue Valley? rvlivemusic.com

Hey r/Medford, I made a thing: rvlivemusic.com

I originally made this as a personal project because I hated browsing multiple sites that were super outdated and useless on mobile.

It's a free, no-ads site that pulls together live music shows, open mics, and jam sessions across Medford, Ashland, Grants Pass, Jacksonville, and the rest of Southern Oregon. Updated regularly.

A few things I think make it worth bookmarking:

  • No ads. Just the info you came for.
  • Filter by date, region, type, and genre. Useful if you only care about, say, open mics in Ashland this weekend.
  • Works offline-ish. It caches the last loaded data, so if the source is down you'll still see recent listings.

One important note: I don't control the source data. That comes from roguevalleylivemusicnightlife.com. If a show is missing or wrong, you can submit an update directly through my site or their site (there are a couple ways to do it). I just built this as a cleaner, faster way to browse what they already maintain.

Would love any feedback. Hope it's useful!

u/UnconcernedPuma — 29 days ago

Land them faster, hold them softer.

Welcome to a quick post about handling and tippet size! Been seeing a lot of catch photos lately, and I want to bring up two things that affect fish survival, not to call anyone out, just to share what’s worked for me. I wrote up the below section based off trout, so this isn’t a universal truth (just to get that out of the way).

On handling: Squeezing a fish hard around the midsection can damage internal organs and that protective slime coat. A few habits that help: keep them wet, support them gently under the belly and near the tail without gripping, keep air exposure under 10 seconds, and skip the high lift-and-squeeze for the camera. Get the shot framed before you lift, take it fast, and get them back in the water. You don’t need 20 photos of the same fish that you’ll never look back at.

On tippet: Fishing light feels sporting, but it drags out the fight and exhausts the fish, which tanks their odds after release, especially in warm water. Size up so you can land them quickly.

Some practical guidelines: if you’re throwing streamers, there’s no real reason to go lighter than 3X-4X. For nymphing, 4X-5X covers the vast majority of situations, with 5X being appropriate when you’re fishing smaller patterns. 5X is realistically the lightest most of us ever need, and even on pressured water with tiny dries it handles the job. The “light tippet = more skill” mindset costs fish. A quick fight on appropriate tippet is better catch-and-release practice than a long battle on 6X or 7X.

None of this is about being preachy, just want to share what I’ve learned from experienced anglers, guides, etc over the years. Most of us are out there because we love these fish and want them around. Just a few small tweaks that make a real difference.

Tight lines y’all!

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u/UnconcernedPuma — 1 month ago

Spent a few hours at this local tailwater, caught a couple monsters on some #18 WD-40s. Love this addiction.

u/UnconcernedPuma — 2 months ago